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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 15, 2001, 21(2):559-569
Coordination of the Bladder Detrusor and the External Urethral
Sphincter in a Rat Model of Spinal Cord Injury: Effect of Injury
Severity
Victor
Pikov1 and
Jean
R.
Wrathall2
Departments of 1 Cell Biology and
2 Neuroscience, Georgetown University, Washington, DC 20007
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ABSTRACT |
Recovery of urinary tract function after spinal cord injury (SCI)
is important in its own right and may also serve as a model for
studying mechanisms of functional recovery after injury in the
CNS. Normal micturition requires coordinated activation of smooth muscle of the bladder (detrusor) and striated muscle of the
external urethral sphincter (EUS) that is controlled by spinal and
supraspinal circuitry. We used a clinically relevant rat model of
thoracic spinal cord contusion injury to examine the effect of varying
the degree of residual supraspinal connections on chronic detrusor-EUS
coordination. Urodynamic evaluation at 8 weeks after SCI showed that
detrusor contractions of the bladder recovered similarly in groups of
rats injured with a 10 gm weight dropped 12.5, 25, or 50 mm onto the
spinal cord. In contrast, the degree of coordinated activation of the
EUS varied with the severity of initial injury and the degree of
preservation of white matter at the injury site. The 12.5 mm SCI
resulted in the sparing of 20% of the white matter at the injury site
and complete recovery of detrusor-EUS coordination. In more severely
injured rats, the chronic recovery of detrusor-EUS coordination was
very incomplete and correlated to decreased innervation of lower
motoneurons by descending control pathways and their increased levels
of mRNA for glutamate receptor subunits NR2A and GluR2. These
results show that the extent of recovery of detrusor-EUS coordination depends on injury severity and the degree of residual connections with
brainstem control centers.
Key words:
bladder; urethral sphincter; dyssynergia; electromyography; urodynamics; spinal cord contusion; serotonin; corticotropin-releasing factor; glutamate receptors
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INTRODUCTION |
After incomplete spinal cord injury
(SCI), both reflex and voluntary motor functions below the level of the
injury are initially lost; partial recovery occurs with time after
injury (Gale et al., 1985 ; Basso et al., 1995 ; Ko et al., 1999 ).
Although the return of segmental reflexes is relatively fast, the
recovery of functions mediated by supraspinally controlled reflexes is slow and limited in extent (Leis et al., 1996 ; Hiersemenzel et al.,
2000 ). Because approximately one-half of the patients with spinal
trauma have incomplete injury (Bracken et al., 1990 ), treatments to
improve recovery of function after SCI are important. A primary requirement is an understanding of the mechanisms involved in the
natural recovery of function after incomplete SCI.
Incomplete SCI results in an initial loss and later partial recovery of
lower urinary tract (LUT) function (Pikov et al., 1998 ). This provides
an attractive model to study mechanisms of functional recovery for
several reasons. The pathways involved are relatively simple as
compared, for instance, with those involved in the control of
locomotion (Dietz et al., 1999 ). Control of LUT function has been well
studied both in normal animals and animals after spinal transection
(Tiseo and Yaksh, 1990 ; de Groat, 1995 ; Morrison, 1997 ; de Groat et
al., 1998 ). Impairment of LUT function after SCI is a clinically
important problem (Selzman and Hampel, 1993 ). Clinical data indicate
that the recovery of voluntary control of external urethral sphincter
(EUS) function after incomplete SCI occurs in the same time frame as
the recovery of voluntary control of somatic skeletal muscle (Schurch,
1999 ) and thus likely involves some of the same basic mechanisms.
Normal LUT function involves spinal and supraspinal circuitry that
controls urine storage and release (de Groat, 1990 ). In rats, urine
release is mediated by contraction of the bladder detrusor accompanied
by coordinated activation of the EUS. If EUS activity is removed by
neuromuscular blockade, efficient voiding is abolished (Maggi et al.,
1986a ; Mersdorf et al., 1993 ; Kakizaki et al., 1997 ). After thoracic
spinal cord transection, there is an initial loss of bladder
contractions followed by their recovery (Tiseo and Yaksh, 1990 ; Pikov
et al., 1998 ). Loss of coordinated EUS activation is, however,
permanent (Kruse et al., 1993 ; Pikov et al., 1998 ), indicating that
pathways to and from centers above the thoracic spinal cord are
important for EUS function. In a previous study of incomplete SCI
(Pikov et al., 1998 ), we found evidence of detrusor-EUS coordination
in week 2 after injury. Transneuronal viral tracing indicated that the
SCI animals with recovered detrusor-EUS coordination had spared
residual connections from the bladder to brainstem centers that
normally are involved in micturition control including Barrington's
nucleus (Kruse et al., 1990 ). We postulated that the presence of
residual connections with brainstem control centers for micturition
served as the anatomical basis of partial functional recovery. In the
current study we examined this hypothesis by experimentally varying the
loss of supraspinal connections by altering injury severity and thus
loss of white matter at the injury site.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Experimental groups. Adult female Sprague Dawley rats
(Zivic Miller, Allison, PA) weighing 270-350 gm were used. Rats were anesthetized with chloral hydrate (360 mg/kg, i.p.). Laminectomy was
performed at T8, and SCI was produced with a weight-drop injury device (Gruner, 1992 ) by use of the 10 gm weight dropped from the
height of 12.5 mm (n = 7), 25 mm (n = 5), or 50 mm (n = 7) onto exposed dura. One group of
control animals had laminectomies but was left uninjured
(n = 6).
Animal care. Rats were housed in the Department of
Comparative Medicine Animal Facility, where they were kept in a room
with controlled humidity, temperature, and light cycle (12 hr on/12 hr
off) and had access to food and water ad libitum. This
facility is supervised by a licensed veterinarian, meets all National
Institutes of Health guidelines for the care of laboratory rodents, and
is fully accredited by the Association for Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care. Postoperatively, rats were housed in pairs (to reduce stress from isolation) and kept at 22-25°C on highly absorbent bedding. They received manual expression of the bladder twice daily for
2 weeks after SCI. Under these conditions, the mortality of spinal
cord-injured rats was ~5% (1 of 19), and no evidence of infection,
pressure sores, or self-mutilation was seen in surviving animals. The
one SCI animal (from the 25 mm group) died as a result of a urinary
tract infection.
Behavioral tests of hindlimb functional deficits. All rats
were tested blindly for functional deficits on days 1 and 7 and weekly
thereafter through 8 weeks after injury. The combined behavioral score
(CBS) was used as a measure of overall hindlimb functional deficit
(Gale et al., 1985 ; Kerasidis et al., 1987 ). To calculate the CBS, we
used a battery of reflex tests including toe spread and placing and
withdrawal in response to stimulation, righting, and hot plate. Rats
were also tested for coordination between forelimbs and hindlimbs and
weight support during walking, swimming, and standing on an inclined
plane. The CBS ranges from 0 to 100, with 0 indicating no functional
deficit and 100 indicating abnormal responses in all of the tests. Rats
were also evaluated by an expanded open-field locomotion scale
(BBB, Basso et al., 1995 ), in which a completely paralyzed rat scores
0, a rat with increasing joint movements but without weight support
scores between 1 and 8, an abnormally locomoting rat with weight
support scores between 9 and 20, and a normal rat scores 21.
Assessment of LUT function. LUT function was examined using
a urodynamic procedure (Maggi et al., 1986b ) that allows a rapid collection of data over a large number of voiding cycles. Animals were
randomly divided into blocks comprising one normal rat and rats from
two or three SCI groups. Animals from each block (n = 6) were studied urodynamically on the same day. Bladder intravesical pressure was recorded with a transurethral bladder catheter
(polyethylene-50) during continuous perfusion with warm saline (0.22 ml/min). During the bladder detrusor contractions, fluid was released
by flowing around the catheter in the urethra. The signal from the
pressure transducer was amplified (TA200 transducer amplifier; Caldwell Biomedical Electronics, Tully, NY), sampled at 1 kHz using a 12-bit analog-to-digital board (model PCI-MIO-16E-4; National Instruments, Austin, TX), and acquired on-line using BioBench 1.0 software (National
Instruments). For electromyography (EMG), two fine (50 µm)
epoxy-coated platinum-iridium wire electrodes (A-M Systems, Inc.,
Everett, WA) were placed percutaneously in the sphincter area of the
urethra to record EUS electrical activity. A 30 gauge needle with a
hooked wire electrode positioned at the tip was inserted into the EUS
and then withdrawn leaving the wires embedded in the muscle. The EMG
activity was preamplified (Cornerstone AMP-8 preamplifier; Dagan
Corporation, Minneapolis, MN), sampled at 1 kHz, and acquired on-line
simultaneously with intravesical pressure. Although the baseline
amplitude of large-skeletal muscle EMGs is a relatively consistent
value, sphincteric EMG amplitude depends on the placement of the thin
wire electrodes, which can cause significant variation in baseline
amplitude values depending on their location (Callsen-Cencic and Mense,
1998 ). Therefore, the baseline fluctuations caused by a low-frequency
component of the EMG (which is generally attributed to activity of the
internal urethral sphincter muscle) were filtered out by the use of a
baseline zero correction at 100 msec intervals. The rate of spiking EUS activity was calculated from 60 Hz-filtered EMG data by the use of a
custom-written peak detection macro for Excel (Microsoft Corporation,
Redmond, WA), which counts the number of peaks above the defined
threshold at 100 msec intervals. The average values of spiking EUS
activity during bladder filling and voiding were calculated, and
threshold (at the initiation of contraction) and maximal intravesical
pressures during voiding were measured for each voiding cycle over a 20 min period in each of the animals.
Intravesical catheter and EMG wires were inserted while the animal was
anesthetized with chloral hydrate (360 mg/kg, i.p.). The rat was then
placed in a body-shaped cloth glove and allowed to recover from
anesthesia for 2 hr. The urodynamic recordings were done on the awake
restrained animal because anesthesia markedly reduces the efficiency of
voiding (Yoshiyama et al., 1994a , 1999 ). After the urodynamic
experiment, the animal was reanesthetized with chloral hydrate and
perfused with saline followed with 4% paraformaldehyde. The bladder
was removed, blot-dried, weighed, and measured. The bladder volume
(V) was calculated by the equation for an ellipsoid:
V = 4/3 * * L * W *
W, where L is bladder length and W is
bladder width. This method estimates the volume of the nonexpanded
bladder and therefore is possibly underestimating the real bladder
volume because of elastic distension.
White matter sparing at the injury site. Spinal cord tissue
was dissected and post-fixed overnight. Fifteen-millimeter-long thoracic spinal cord segments containing the injury site from two to
three SCI groups and a corresponding segment from the uninjured control, comprising the block of animals from a day's urodynamic study, were embedded together in ornithine carbamyl transferase (OCT;
Tissue-Tek; Sakura Finetek, Torrance, CA) and sectioned at 20 µm on a
cryostat (Jung Frigocut 2800 E; Leica, Deerfield, IL). One slide per
millimeter length of spinal cord was stained with eriochrome cyanine
for myelinated white matter (Clark, 1981 ). One section on the slide
representing the injury epicenter (containing the least white matter)
was used to quantify the area of myelinated white matter in the lateral
and ventral funiculi by calculating the area covered by dark pixels
(above the set threshold) with the aid of an image analysis system
(Scion Image; Scion Corporation, Frederick, MD).
Analysis of motoneurons in the dorsolateral and sacral
parasympathetic nuclei. L5-S2 spinal cord from the rats was used
for immunohistochemical and in situ hybridization studies.
Tissue segments from the uninjured control and two to three SCI groups were frozen together in OCT, and serial sections were cut at 12 µm on
a cryostat. One slide per millimeter length of cord was stained with
neutral red, and the dorsolateral (DL) and sacral parasympathetic
nuclei (SPN) were identified on the basis of criteria developed from
separate animals that were used for retrograde tracing from the bladder
and EUS, as described below.
Identification of DL motoneurons by retrograde labeling
with Fluororuby. Multiple (six to eight) microinjections of 50 µl of 10% Fluororuby (tetramethylrhodamine-labeled dextran; 3000 molecular weight; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) into the EUS area were
given to uninjured animals (n = 2) using a Hamilton
microsyringe. Six days after injection, the animals were anesthetized
with chloral hydrate; their spinal cords were removed and fixed with
4% paraformaldehyde. Twenty micrometer cryosections from the
lumbosacral spinal cord were prepared and counterstained with neutral
red or the nuclear dye Hoechst 33342 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO; 1:5000) to
visualize cell bodies. Sections were examined using epifluorescent
illumination and appropriate filters. Drawings of the representative
spinal cord profiles with labeled and nonlabeled ventral horn
motoneurons were made based on results from three consecutive sections.
Identification of SPN by viral tracing. Residual
brainstem-spinal projections were examined using retrograde
trans-synaptic labeling with pseudorabies virus injected into the
bladder wall of uninjured animals as described previously (Pikov et
al., 1998 ). In brief, the animals were anesthetized, and pseudorabies
virus (Bartha K strain; ~15 µl at 109
pfu/ml) was slowly injected into the ventral bladder detrusor muscle.
Three to 4 d later, rats were reanesthetized and perfused with
fixative, and frozen sections were prepared. The location of the virus
in the SPN of S1 spinal cord was confirmed by immunohistochemistry using an anti-pseudorabies virus rabbit polyclonal antiserum (serum Rb-134; a gift from Dr. Lynn Enquist, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ; 1:20,000).
Immunohistochemistry. Sections through the middle of DL were
incubated with a rabbit anti-rat polyclonal antibody to serotonin (#20080; Diasorin, Stillwater, MN; 1:100). Sections containing SPN were
incubated with a rabbit antiserum to rat/human corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF; a gift from Dr. W. Vale, The Salk Institute, La Jolla, CA;
1:2000). Immunoreactivity was visualized using biotin-conjugated secondary antibodies (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) and the
peroxidase chromogen SG (Vector Laboratories). Each slide contained the sections from the uninjured control and all experimental groups. One slide for SPN and one for DL were analyzed for each animal.
Three nonconsecutive sections were selected from each slide, and the
immunoreactivity was quantified for both the left and the right nucleus
using an image analysis program (Scion Image) to calculate an average
value for that animal. CRF immunoreactivity in the SPN was quantified
by capturing the area of the nucleus (260 × 230 µm) and
counting the number of dark pixels in that area. Quantification of the
whole area rather than that around individual motoneurons was performed
because of the high density and small size of the SPN neurons.
Serotonin immunoreactivity surrounding DL motoneurons was quantified by
tracing the cell boundary and counting the number of dark pixels (above
the set threshold) outside of the cell body and within a circle (68 µm in diameter) centered on the cell body. If the sampling circles of
adjacent motoneurons were overlapping, the serotonin immunoreactivity around these motoneurons was not quantified. This resulted in the
exclusion of <10% of motoneurons. The average density of serotonin immunoreactivity for DL motoneurons was based on analysis of 10-29 neurons per animal. The average animal values were used in the statistical analyses.
In situ hybridization. Slides containing sections
through the DL nucleus from the uninjured controls and two to three SCI groups were hybridized with
35S-dATP-labeled antisense
oligonucleotides to NMDA (NR1, NR2A, and NR2B) and AMPA (GluR1,
GluR2, GluR3, and GluR4) subunit mRNA, as described previously
(Grossman et al., 1999 , 2000 ). Slides were exposed to Eastman Kodak
(Rochester, NY) NT2B photographic emulsion for 7 weeks and then
developed (with D19 developer), fixed with general-purpose fixer
(Eastman Kodak), and counterstained with neutral red. Grain counting
was performed by tracing neutral red-stained cell bodies and counting
the cell size and number of overlying grains by use of an image
analysis program (Scion Image). The density of grains (grains per
square micrometer) for a given cell was calculated as the ratio of the
grain number to the cell size and corrected for background by
subtracting the density of grains in adjacent areas devoid of tissue.
DL motoneurons on both sides of two nonconsecutive sections on each of
two slides were examined in each animal (15-32 in total), and the mean
animal values were used in statistical analysis. In addition, the
number of DL motoneurons per section was determined for each animal.
Statistical analysis. All data were subjected to statistical
analysis using the SigmaStat 2.0 program (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL).
One-way ANOVA or repeat measures ANOVA tests were the main tests
used, followed by post hoc tests (Tukey) of differences between specific groups or time points. A significance level of p < 0.05 was used. Throughout the text, figures, and
tables, the mean value ± SD notations are used in describing the
results, unless otherwise indicated.
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RESULTS |
Severity of spinal cord injury
At the time of contusion, the readings from the weight-drop
apparatus provided information about the velocity of impact and the
extent and duration of spinal cord compression (Gruner, 1992 ). From
these data, the compression rate was calculated as the ratio of cord
compression depth over time because this parameter was established
previously to be the most sensitive measure of the initial impact
(Constantini and Young, 1994 ). The average compression rate was found
to be significantly different among the three SCI groups (Fig.
1A).

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Figure 1.
Varying degrees of contusive SCI were produced by
dropping the 10 gm weight from the heights of 12.5, 25, and 50 mm.
A, The compression rate calculated from weight-drop
device measures was different among the three SCI groups. B,
C, The hindlimb and locomotion behavioral tests done at 8 weeks
after SCI indicated a significantly different level of somatic
sensorimotor recovery as quantified by BBB (B)
and CBS (C) in the 12.5 mm group compared with
the more severe 25 and 50 mm groups. One asterisk
indicates a significant difference from the 12.5 mm SCI group, and
two asterisks indicate a difference between 25 and 50 mm
groups, based on p < 0.05 in Tukey's post
hoc test after ANOVA.
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Behavioral tests of hindlimb function were done during the recovery
period after SCI (day 1 and weekly through 8 weeks). As described previously (Gale et al., 1985 ; Basso et al., 1996 ), hindlimb
functional deficits were maximal at day 1 and then showed partial
recovery over the next several weeks with a plateau seen by 3 weeks
after injury. At day 1 the three injury groups were indistinguishable,
but by 1 week the 12.5 mm group demonstrated increased recovery
compared with the 25 and 50 mm groups (data not shown). Hindlimb
functional recovery in the small number of rats in the 25 mm group
(n = 4) was not significantly different from that in
the 50 mm group at any week after injury, although a nonsignificant
trend toward enhanced recovery was seen on weeks 3-8. Chronic (week 8)
behavioral measures of overall hindlimb functional deficits (Fig.
1C, CBS) and of locomotion recovery (Fig.
1B, BBB) showed significant differences between the
12.5 mm group, which attained weight-bearing locomotion, and the 25 and
50 mm groups, which on average did not. This is an important distinction, because voluntary overground locomotion with full weight
support requires supraspinal control (Grillner and Dubuc, 1988 ; Mori et
al., 1999 ).
After the behavioral and urodynamic evaluations on week 8, the chronic
injury sites were examined for histopathology. As described previously
for this and other models of contusion injury in the rat (Noble and
Wrathall, 1985 ; Basso et al., 1996 ; Beattie et al., 1997 ), cross
sections of the injury epicenter (region of maximal damage)
demonstrated a central lesion devoid of normal spinal cord tissue
surrounded by a peripheral rim of preserved white matter (Fig.
2). White matter immediately adjacent to
the central lesion appeared very lightly stained. More peripherally located white matter was closer to normal in its eriochrome cyanine staining. On the basis of a previous evaluation of residual white matter 8 weeks after SCI at the electron microscopy level (Wrathall et
al., 1998 ), we interpreted the reduced myelin staining to be caused by
a combination of axonal loss, which is greatest near the central
cavity, as well as hypomyelination of the surviving axons. The amount
of this residual myelinated white matter appeared to be less in the
more severe injury groups. We quantified the area of residual white
matter in lateral and ventral funiculi at the injury epicenter (Fig. 2,
bottom right), because these funiculi have been shown
previously to contain both the ascending and descending
micturition-related pathways (Loewy et al., 1979 ; Fedirchuk and
Shefchyk, 1991 ). The 12.5 mm group retained significantly greater
residual white matter than did the more severely injured groups. They
had more than triple the residual white matter of the 25 mm group and
~10 times that of the 50 mm group. The residual white matter in the
lateral and ventral funiculi of the 12.5 mm group was ~20% of that
in uninjured control rats. Taken together, the biomechanical,
behavioral, and morphometric measures of SCI severity indicate that the
12.5 mm group of animals sustained significantly less initial traumatic
injury and exhibited less neurological impairment and chronic white
matter loss at the lesion site than did the 25 and 50 mm groups.

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Figure 2.
White matter sparing at the SCI epicenter.
Top, Bottom Left, Photomicrographs of representative
sections through the lesion epicenter from the three SCI groups and
from an uninjured control stained with eriochrome cyanine to label
myelin. The dorsal, lateral, and ventral funicular white matter of the
normal spinal cord is heavily stained, whereas little myelin staining
is seen in the central gray matter. The cross-sectional profiles of the
injured spinal cords are reduced in diameter. The center of the injured
cords contains cavities and an abnormal loose network of cells, but no
myelin staining is apparent. A peripheral rim of residual white matter
is seen. Myelin staining is present but reduced compared with normal
white matter, consistent with the chronic hypomyelination of residual
axons. Bottom Right, The average areas of myelinated
white matter from the ventral and lateral funicular zones at the lesion
epicenter in the SCI groups. One asterisk
indicates a significant difference from the 12.5 mm SCI group, based on
p < 0.05 in Tukey's post hoc test
after ANOVA. Scale bar, 250 µm.
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Effect of injury severity on spontaneous LUT function
Initially after SCI the rats were not capable of spontaneous
micturition, and their bladders were manually expressed twice daily.
The volume of expressed urine was measured each time, and the data were
used to estimate the initiation of spontaneous LUT function after SCI.
In all rats the volume of manually expressed urine increased over the
first few days after SCI and then decreased as spontaneous micturition
was reestablished. On the basis of our previous data on increased
bladder size with time after SCI (Pikov et al., 1998 ) and a limited
study using metabolic cages (V. Pikov, unpublished observations), the
increase in volume of expressed urine during the first 4 d after
injury was interpreted as resulting from increased bladder size in the
absence of spontaneous micturition. The subsequent decrease in manually
expressed urine was interpreted to indicate the initiation of
spontaneous micturition. Because of the maintenance of an enlarged
bladder and the reduced voiding efficiency of SCI rats (Pikov et al.,
1998 ), the volume of urine that could be expressed remained higher than
that in uninjured rats even after spontaneous micturition was
established. This was especially evident in the 25 and 50 mm groups.
Thus, the injury groups demonstrated differences in that the more
severely injured rats retained a higher residual urine volume and
required a longer time period before displaying evidence of spontaneous micturition (Fig. 3). The average time
for initiation of spontaneous micturition was significantly longer in
the 50 mm group than in the 12.5 mm group (Table
1). Chronically, at 8 weeks after
SCI, bladder weights and volumes were significantly increased in
the 25 and 50 mm groups compared with uninjured controls (Table 1).

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Figure 3.
Time course of recovery of spontaneous voiding.
Urinary bladders were expressed every 12 hr, and the collected urine
volume was measured. The height of the
bars indicates urine volume within one SE above and
below the group mean at the specified time point. Compared with 25 and
50 mm SCI animals, the 12.5 mm SCI animals had progressively less urine
collected with time after SCI.
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Effect of injury severity on chronic urodynamic function
Urodynamic evaluation chronically at 8 weeks after SCI
demonstrated that injury severity was correlated with the degree of recovery of detrusor-EUS coordination. Uninjured animals had large bladder detrusor contractions (Fig.
4A; Table 1), which
were accompanied by increased amplitude in EUS EMG (Fig.
4D). The bladder contraction often had two
incremental pressure increases, with the first intravesical pressure
increase corresponding to a maximal increase in EUS activity and
extensive voiding. A second increase in intravesical pressure
(overshoot) was often seen and coincided with cessation of EUS
activation and little or no voiding. Unlike uninjured animals, all SCI
animals lacked the intravesical pressure overshoot and demonstrated
somewhat decreased bladder detrusor contractions in response to bladder
filling (Fig. 4B,C; Table 1).

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Figure 4.
Urodynamic analysis of detrusor-EUS coordination
in representative uninjured (A, D, G, J), 12.5 mm
SCI (B, E, H, K), and 50 mm SCI (C, F, I,
L) animals. A-C, Bladder intravesical pressure
(IVP) recordings during one voiding cycle. Solid
horizontal lines in A and B
indicate the duration of stream-like voiding, and the dashed
line in C indicates the drop-by-drop voiding.
D-F, EUS EMG recordings, showing an activation of EUS
EMG in relationship to the voiding cycle in uninjured and 12.5 mm SCI
animals but not in the 50 mm SCI animal. G-I, Power
spectrum analysis of EUS EMG activity as a function of time. A broad
band of frequencies (5-40 Hz) shows an increased power during
the voiding phase in uninjured and 12.5 mm SCI animals but not in the
50 mm SCI animal. J-L, Peak detection analysis of the
ESA. Peaks were detected in 1 dsec intervals. An increase in ESA
(dESA) occurred at the time corresponding to the voiding phase in
uninjured and 12.5 mm SCI animals, but there was no change in the level
of ESA in the 50 mm SCI animal.
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The time-frequency analysis of EUS EMG yielded important quantitative
parameters, such as mean EMG activity, mean EMG power frequency, and
mean EMG-spiking activity (ESA) (Fig. 4). The timing of the coordinated
EUS activation was unaltered by the SCI (data not shown) in the animals
in which a detectable increase in EMG parameters was found. The EMG
parameters were compared between the contraction and filling phases.
All of the rats in the 12.5 mm SCI group exhibited bladder contractions
leading to stream-like voiding (Fig. 4B) and an
increase in the amplitude of EUS activity at the time of detrusor
contractions (Fig. 4E). In contrast, in the animals
from the 25 and 50 mm groups, the urine was released in a dropwise
manner independent of detrusor contractions (Fig. 4C).
Animals in these groups showed little or no increase in EUS EMG
amplitude during detrusor contractions (Fig. 4F).
Changes in EUS EMG were evaluated during the progression of the
micturition cycle by power spectrum analysis using the fast Fourier
transform algorithm (Fig. 4G-I). During the voiding
phase as compared with the filling phase, the power of the 5-40 Hz EMG frequency band was increased in both uninjured (Fig. 4G) and
12.5 mm SCI animals (Fig. 4H) but not in the 25 and
50 mm SCI animals (Fig. 4I). Peak detection analysis
(Fig. 4J-L) demonstrated the increase in the ESA
(dESA) during voiding in uninjured (Fig. 4J) and 12.5 mm SCI animals (Fig. 4K) but not in more
severely injured animals, as illustrated by the representative animal
from the 50 mm SCI group (Fig. 4L). The animals from
the 12.5 mm SCI groups demonstrated dESA values that were not different
from those of the uninjured group, whereas 25 and 50 mm SCI groups
exhibited progressively decreased dESAs (Fig.
5A). Among the studied EUS EMG
parameters, the dESA was most sensitive to SCI and was therefore used
in describing detrusor-EUS coordination in subsequent analyses.

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Figure 5.
Detrusor-EUS coordination was measured by the
increase in EUS EMG during voiding (dESA). The value of dESA was
correlated to SCI severity (A), to white matter
sparing at the injury epicenter (T8 spinal segment)
(B), to the amount of serotonin immunoreactivity
(5HT-ir) in the DL nucleus (C),
and to CRF immunoreactivity (CRF-ir) in the SPN
(D). Correlation coefficients are shown at the
top left corner of B-D. In
A, symbols indicate a significant
difference from the uninjured group (one asterisk) or
from both the uninjured and 12.5 mm groups (two
asterisks). In B-D, the correlation
coefficients are significant (p < 0.001).
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Identification of spinal motoneurons innervating the bladder and
the EUS
Motoneurons innervating the EUS in the rat are located in the DL
nucleus of the L6-S1 ventral horn (Schroder, 1980 ), and those innervating the bladder are part of the SPN (Nadelhaft and Booth, 1984 ). To confirm the location of DL motoneurons at the lateral portion
of the ventral horn (Schroder, 1980 ), we injected the retrograde tracer
Fluororuby in the EUS using locations similar to those in which we
placed EUS EMG wires. The general histological appearance of the spinal
cord sections was traced and Fluororuby labeled, and nonlabeled ventral
horn motoneurons were identified (Fig.
6A, middle,
C). Motoneurons that were retrogradely labeled from the EUS
with Fluororuby were located in the lateral ventral horn, in the DL
nucleus, over a length of ~7 mm from the L5-L6 junction to the
L6-S1 junction. At S1, however, the morphologically identifiable DL
was no longer present as a nucleus (Fig. 6B,
left), and no retrogradely labeled motoneurons were present
in the ventral horn (Fig. 6B, middle).

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Figure 6.
A, B, Bright-field photomicrographs
and their drawings show sections through the DL nucleus at L6
(A) and the SPN at S1 (B).
Left, Photomicrographs show neutral red-stained neurons.
Middle, Tracings of these photomicrographs show the gray
matter contour and outlines of motoneurons in the ventral horn that
were backlabeled with the retrograde tracer Fluororuby (closed
circles) or had no labeling (open circles).
Right, Photomicrographs show the pseudorabies virus
tracing at the corresponding levels of spinal cord. C, A
fluorescence photomicrograph of the area indicated by the
circle in A (left) shows
Fluororuby deposits in DL motoneurons that were retrogradely labeled
from the EUS. D, A bright-field photomicrograph taken
from the area indicated by the box in B
(right) shows neurons in the SPN that were
retrogradely labeled with pseudorabies virus from the bladder. Scale
bars: A, B, 500 µm; C, D, 20 µm.
|
|
A separate animal was injected with pseudorabies virus into the bladder
wall for transneuronal tracing as described previously (Pikov et al.,
1998 ) to identify the location of bladder-projecting motoneurons
in relationship to DL motoneurons. Sections through the L6 level (Fig.
6A, right) indicated a lack of
pseudorabies virus labeling in DL motoneurons. However, at the S1 level
there was strong labeling in the intermediolateral gray in the location of motoneurons of the SPN (Fig. 6B, right,
boxed area, D).
By coexamining the neutral red-stained sections with adjacent
Fluororuby sections in the DL (Fig. 6A, circled
area, left) and with the pseudorabies virus staining in
the SPN (Fig. 6B, boxed area,
left), the criteria for morphological identification of
these areas were made. In subsequent immunohistochemical and in
situ hybridization studies, the DL and SPN nuclei were identified on the basis of the neutral red-staining patterns.
Relationship between detrusor-EUS coordination and preservation of
long tracts after SCI
White matter sparing at the epicenter was significantly correlated
with dESA (Fig. 5B), indicating that the degree of general supraspinal connectivity was an important factor in recovery of detrusor-EUS coordination. The preservation of descending supraspinal connections believed to be involved in the control of detrusor-EUS coordination was further probed by immunohistochemistry for long tract-descending innervation of neurons in the DL and SPN. A portion of
the supraspinal-descending control innervates the DL directly (Ding et
al., 1995 ; Hermann et al., 1998 ). We therefore evaluated the
supraspinal terminations around the EUS-innervating motoneurons in this
area using serotonin immunoreactivity, because brainstem serotonergic
pathways are involved in the control of micturition (McMahon and
Spillane, 1982 ; Durant and Yaksh, 1988 ; Fukuda and Koga, 1991 ; Thor and
Katofiasc, 1995 ; Espey et al., 1998 ).
The number of neutral red-stained motoneurons in the DL was unaffected
by SCI: 9.7 ± 1.9, 9.8 ± 2.2, 10.2 ± 2.7, and
9.8 ± 2.0 neurons per section for uninjured and 12.5, 25, and 50 mm SCI groups, respectively. Similarly, the size of DL motoneurons, expressed as the cell body area, was similar in normal and SCI rats:
1113 ± 178 µm2 compared with
1177 ± 153, 1157 ± 137, and 1251 ± 155 µm2 in 12.5, 25, and 50 mm SCI groups,
respectively. In uninjured rats, strong serotonin immunoreactivity was
seen as a punctate stain surrounding DL motoneuronal cell bodies and
their processes (Fig. 7A). All
DL motoneurons demonstrated serotonergic innervation. DL motoneurons at
8 weeks after 12.5 mm SCI were also consistently associated with
serotonergic innervation (Fig. 7B), and the density of
innervation was similar to that of uninjured controls (103 ± 9%)
based on comparison of injured and control sections on the same slide.
All but 1 of 38 DL neurons analyzed in the 25 mm SCI group had
associated serotonin immunoreactivity, but the density (positive pixels
per unit area) was significantly reduced to 25 ± 19% of
controls. In the 50 mm SCI groups many DL neurons (91 of 159) did not
have associated serotonin immunoreactivity (Fig. 7C), and
for those that did the density was lower than that in uninjured
controls (24 ± 18%). The average density of serotonin immunoreactivity associated with DL motoneurons in individual rats was
positively correlated to their detrusor-EUS coordination as measured
by dESA (Fig. 5C).

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Figure 7.
Immunoreactivity for descending projections to
lumbosacral areas involved in micturition. A-C,
Bright-field photomicrographs showing serotonin immunoreactivity in the
DL. High levels of the immunoreactivity are seen in uninjured
(A) and 12.5 mm SCI (B)
animals, and virtually no labeling is seen in the 50 mm SCI animal
(C). D-F, Bright-field
photomicrographs showing CRF immunoreactivity in the SPN. Progressively
decreased levels of immunoreactivity are seen in uninjured
(D), 12.5 mm SCI (E), and
50 mm SCI (F) animals. Scale bar, 20 µm.
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|
An important descending supraspinal projection to the SPN was
identified using CRF immunoreactivity (Fig. 7D-F),
which labels micturition- and distal colon-related pathways (Valentino
et al., 1996 , 2000 ). In uninjured rats, intense CRF immunoreactivity
was associated with the SPN (Fig. 7D), and it was reduced in
SCI animals (Fig. 7E,F). Quantification of CRF
immunoreactivity showed an injury severity-dependent reduction
chronically after SCI. As a percentage of pixel density of CRF
immunoreactivity in uninjured control sections on the same slide, the
SCI groups averaged 64 ± 3, 33 ± 11, and 21 ± 2% for the 12.5, 25, and 50 mm groups, respectively. The
density of CRF immunoreactivity in the SPN was positively correlated
with the degree of detrusor-EUS coordination as measured by dESA (Fig.
5D).
In situ hybridization analysis of glutamate receptor
subunit mRNA in DL motoneurons
In situ hybridization with oligonucleotide probes for
NMDA NR1, NR2A, and NR2B and AMPA GluR1, GluR2, GluR3, and GluR4
subunit mRNAs indicated expression of these mRNAs in DL motoneurons of uninjured controls (Fig. 8).
Quantification of grains showed no difference in the pattern of mRNA
expressed between the uninjured animals and the animals from the 12.5 mm SCI group that demonstrated a normal level of detrusor-EUS
coordination (Table 2). Significant increases were seen, however, in mRNA for GluR2 and NR2A in both the 25 and 50 mm SCI groups compared with uninjured controls or the 12.5 mm
SCI group (Table 2). Regression analyses indicated a lack of
significant correlation between levels of GluR2 or NR2A and dESA (data
not shown).

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Figure 8.
Bright-field photomicrographs showing neutral
red-stained DL motoneurons overlaid with autoradiography grains of NMDA
subunit NR2A mRNA (left) and AMPA subunit
GluR2 mRNA (right). Top, An
uninjured animal shows moderate levels of mRNA expression.
Middle, A 12.5 mm SCI animal has similar levels of mRNA
expression. Bottom, A 50 mm SCI animal shows high
expression of both NR2A and GluR2 subunit mRNAs. Scale bar, 20 µm.
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Table 2.
Expression of NMDA (NR1, NR2A, and NR2B) and AMPA (GluR1,
GluR2, GluR3, and GluR4) subunit mRNA in DL motoneurons at 8 weeks
|
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Relationship between recovery of LUT function and hindlimb function
after graded SCI
Injury severity had a generally similar effect on recovery of LUT
function and hindlimb function. The more severe 25 and 50 mm SCI groups
demonstrated a similar time course of recovery of spontaneous voiding
(Fig. 3; Table 1), a similar incomplete recovery of detrusor-EUS
coordination (Fig. 5A), and a similar chronic hindlimb
functional deficit as measured by the CBS (Fig. 1C). Importantly, most of these animals did not recover weight-bearing locomotion, as measured by the BBB (Fig. 1B), which
is believed to require supraspinal control (Grillner and Dubuc, 1988 ;
Mori et al., 1999 ). In contrast, the 12.5 mm SCI group recovered
coordinated weight-bearing locomotion (Fig. 1B) and
virtually normal detrusor-EUS coordination (Fig. 5A). This
recovery was associated with sparing of 20% of the white matter at the
injury epicenter and normal chronic levels of serotonin
immunoreactivity (Fig. 6B) and glutamate receptor
subunit mRNA expression associated with DL motoneurons (Table 2). The
relationship between the extent of chronic LUT function and chronic
hindlimb function was further examined by linear regression analysis.
There was a significant correlation between CBS and dESA
(r2 = 0.73; p < 0.001) and between BBB and dESA
(r2 = 0.71; p < 0.001).
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our results demonstrate that a clinically relevant model of spinal
cord contusion in the rat produces injury severity-dependent chronic
effects on the coordination of urinary bladder and EUS function. Twenty
percent white matter sparing at the injury epicenter was sufficient for
complete recovery of detrusor-EUS coordination by 8 weeks after SCI.
This robust recovery of EUS function suggests that it may be a suitable
model system for studies on natural mechanisms of adaptive plasticity
after SCI. In our previous study (Pikov et al., 1998 ), we found that
partial recovery of detrusor-EUS coordination can occur by week 2 after an incomplete contusion injury in the rat. This is in contrast to
results of complete transection after which detrusor-EUS coordination
is permanently lost (Kruse et al., 1993 ; Pikov et al., 1998 ).
Transneuronal viral tracing in our previous study (Pikov et al., 1998 )
indicated that the contused animals had residual connections from the
bladder to brainstem centers that normally are involved in the control of micturition. We postulated that the presence of such residual connections with brainstem control centers for micturition served as
the anatomical basis for the partial functional recovery. In the
current study we examined this hypothesis by experimentally varying the
loss of supraspinal connections by altering injury severity. We found
that the degree of chronic impairment of detrusor-EUS coordination is
positively correlated with (1) the severity of the initial mechanical
trauma, (2) the overall chronic white matter loss at the thoracic
injury site, and (3) the specific loss of innervation by brainstem
pathways to lower motoneurons in the lumbosacral spinal cord that
innervate the bladder and the EUS. In addition, the degree of chronic
detrusor-EUS coordination correlated with the recovery of the somatic
hindlimb functions that also require supraspinal control, such as
weight-bearing locomotion.
Evaluating detrusor-EUS coordination
For this study we applied a method of digital data analysis used
previously for surface EMG data from limb muscles (Feng and Mak, 1998 )
to characterize quantitatively detrusor-EUS coordination in the rat.
This allowed flexibility for postacquisition data filtering and
analyses in time-frequency domains. The time-frequency analysis
yielded important quantitative parameters, such as mean EMG activity,
mean power frequency, and mean ESA. Coordinated EMG activation during
the bladder contraction phase was studied in terms of timing and the
amount of change in the calculated EMG parameters relative to the
filling phase. The former was unaltered, and the latter was
significantly affected by SCI, with ESA being the parameter that was
most sensitive to injury.
Role of supraspinal projections in detrusor-EUS coordination
after SCI
There are several sites in the brainstem that are implicated in
detrusor-EUS coordination. The EUS-controlling motoneurons, located in
the DL nucleus of L6-S1 (Schroder, 1980 ), receive direct and indirect
(via spinal interneurons) supraspinal projections mostly from
Barrington's nucleus (pontine micturition center) (Vizzard et al.,
1995 ; Nadelhaft and Vera, 1996 ; Marson, 1997 ), the D-region just
ventral to Barrington's nucleus (Ding et al., 1995 ), and ventrolateral
pontine periaqueductal gray (Marson, 1997 ; Ding et al., 1998 ; Matsuura
et al., 1998 ). Barrington's nucleus is likely a primary
micturition-controlling center (de Groat, 1990 ). Other brainstem nuclei
with identified connections to bladder and EUS pathways are the raphe
magnus, raphe pallidus, parapyramidal medullary reticular formation,
subcoeruleus pars , locus coeruleus, and the A5 and A7 nuclei
(Vizzard et al., 1995 ; Marson, 1997 ).
Of these, cells in the raphe nuclei and nucleus paragigantocellularis
in the medullary reticular formation produce serotonin (Marson, 1997 ).
We, therefore, used serotonin as a marker of direct supraspinal
projections to DL (Ramirez-Leon et al., 1994 ; Tang et al., 1998 ).
Previous studies in our laboratory and the work of others have
established that serotonin immunoreactivity distal to the injury site
is a good indicator of both SCI severity and the degree of recovery of
somatic sensorimotor function (Faden et al., 1988 ; Wrathall et al.,
1994 ; Teng and Wrathall, 1997 ).
CRF is expressed in cells in Barrington's nucleus that project to the
SPN (Valentino et al., 1996 , 2000 ). The SPN contains preganglionic
motoneurons that innervate the bladder and proximal urethra, as well as
interneurons that convey information from Barrington's nucleus to DL
motoneurons (Loewy et al., 1979 ; Nadelhaft and Booth, 1984 ; Nadelhaft
et al., 1986 ; Pascual et al., 1993 ; Ding et al., 1997 ). We used CRF
immunoreactivity to assess the micturition-related supraspinal
connections to the SPN.
Both of the markers of supraspinal control of micturition that we used
proved to be correlated to the degree of chronic detrusor-EUS coordination. Combined, these measures indicate that recovery of
detrusor-EUS coordination is associated with sparing of supraspinal projections to areas in the lumbosacral spinal cord that control bladder and EUS function. An interesting distinction is that even the
most mildly injured group (12.5 mm SCI) demonstrated significant reductions in CRF innervation of the SPN, which averaged 64% of normal
at 8 weeks after injury. These same rats demonstrated normal (103%)
levels of serotonin immunoreactivity associated with DL motoneurons.
Approximately 80% of white matter is lost at the injury site in these
animals and would be expected to include loss of serotonergic fibers
from the brainstem. Indeed, unpublished data from our laboratory
indicate a 40% reduction in the amount of serotonin immunoreactivity
at 5 d after injury in 12.5 mm SCI rats. Therefore, sprouting
and/or synaptic plasticity of spared serotonergic fibers may occur
during recovery of detrusor-EUS coordination after injury to
compensate for lost fibers.
Role of glutamatergic transmission in normal micturition and
after SCI
Glutamate is widely distributed in both spinal and
supraspinal circuits and thus cannot be readily used as a marker of
supraspinal projections controlling micturition. The descending
projections from Barrington's nucleus (Liu et al., 1995 ) described
above and likely others involved in control of micturition use
glutamate as a primary neurotransmitter (de Groat et al., 1998 ), with
other substances like serotonin and CRF serving modulatory roles
(Yoshiyama et al., 1994b ; Pavcovich and Valentino, 1995 ; Hokfelt et
al., 2000 ). It is important, therefore, to find alternative ways of studying the glutamatergic system in terms of its involvement in
functional recovery after SCI. As the first effort in this direction,
we investigated the pattern of ionotropic glutamate receptor subunit
mRNA expression in DL motoneurons. A major finding was that the subunit
expression levels in animals that recovered detrusor-EUS coordination
were similar to those of uninjured controls, suggesting either that SCI
and subsequent recovery did not involve the alteration in NMDA or AMPA
subunit receptor patterns in DL motoneurons or that during recovery the
receptor subunit patterns returned to normal values after an initial
perturbation. In contrast, animals without recovery of detrusor-EUS
coordination showed elevated levels of specific NMDA and AMPA subunits.
If these changes in chronic mRNA levels are assumed to produce altered
functional glutamate receptors, these alterations may be related to the
aberrant hyperactivity of these motoneurons as seen in the spontaneous spastic activity chronically in lumbosacral motoneurons after SCI
(Hiersemenzel et al., 2000 ; Little et al., 2000 ).
It should be noted that the absence of altered mRNA patterns in DL
motoneurons in the rats that recovered detrusor-EUS coordination does
not preclude a role of glutamatergic systems in this functional recovery. For example, significant alterations may take place in
glutamatergic sensory, brainstem, and/or spinal cord interneuronal portions of the pathways involved or may involve other potential alterations in DL motoneurons that we did not study, such as altered expression of subunit splice variants that can occur after SCI (Prybylowski et al., 2001 ).
Adaptive plasticity in control of micturition: lessons
from development
The establishment of supraspinal control of micturition during
postnatal development involves adaptive synaptic plasticity. Studies by
de Groat and colleagues (Kruse et al., 1993 ; de Groat et al., 1998 )
indicate that shortly after birth, animals undergo a switch from spinal
to supraspinal control mediating the detrusor-EUS voiding reflex that
persists through adulthood. This switch involves an activity-dependent
competition between spinal and supraspinal inputs at individual
synapses. It is possible therefore that recovery of detrusor-EUS
coordination after incomplete SCI involves a similar adaptive
activity-dependent mechanism. Continued recovery of voluntary EUS
function weeks and months after SCI in humans (Schurch, 1999 ) suggests
that there is an ongoing process of greater use of spared control.
Because normal EUS control is mediated mostly by glutamatergic neurotransmission (de Groat et al., 1998 ), an improved coordination chronically after SCI may involve an adaptation in glutamatergic neurotransmission in the function of preserved supraspinal control. This hypothesis will be tested in our future experiments.
In conclusion, our results indicate that the recovery of detrusor-EUS
coordination after SCI occurs in an injury severity-dependent manner.
This functional recovery may offer a suitable model system to study the
adaptive plasticity of residual supraspinal connections after SCI.
Thorough pharmacological investigation of the key neurotransmitters and
their receptors involved in the normal and recovered detrusor-EUS coordination may provide clues regarding natural mechanisms of recovery
of supraspinal control. This information may serve as the basis of
pharmacological and/or other strategies to enhance functional recovery
after SCI.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received July 3, 2000; revised Oct. 25, 2000; accepted Nov. 2, 2000.
This study was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants
RO1NS35647-03 and RO1NS37733-01.We are grateful to Dr. Luc Jasmin for
his help with viral tracing, to Dr. Vale for a kind gift of
corticotropin-releasing factor antibody, to Dr. Enquist for a generous
gift of pseudorabies virus antiserum, and to Dr. Stacie D. Grossman for
her skillful assistance with in situ autoradiography.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Jean R. Wrathall, Department
of Neuroscience, Georgetown University, 3970 Reservoir Road, Northwest,
Washington, DC 20007. E-mail: wrathalj{at}georgetown.edu.
 |
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